Literature DB >> 21895098

Phonetic variability of stops and flaps in spontaneous and careful speech.

Natasha Warner1, Benjamin V Tucker.   

Abstract

Variability is perhaps the most notable characteristic of speech, and it is particularly noticeable in spontaneous conversational speech. The current research examines how speakers realize the American English stops /p, k, b, g/ and flaps (ɾ from /t, d/), in casual conversation and in careful speech. Target consonants appear after stressed syllables (e.g., "lobby") or between unstressed syllables (e.g., "humanity"), in one of six segmental/word-boundary environments. This work documents the degree and types of variability listeners encounter and must parse. Findings show greater reduction in connected and spontaneous speech, greater reduction in high frequency phrases (but not within high frequency words), and greater reduction between unstressed syllables than after a stress. Although highly reduced productions of stops and flaps occur often, with approximant-like tokens even in careful speech, reduction does not lead to a large amount of overlap between phonological categories. Approximant-like realizations of expected stops and flaps in some conditions constitute the majority of tokens. This shows that reduced speech is something that listeners encounter, and must perceive, in a large proportion of the speech they hear.
© 2011 Acoustical Society of America

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21895098     DOI: 10.1121/1.3621306

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am        ISSN: 0001-4966            Impact factor:   1.840


  3 in total

1.  Explaining Coronal Reduction: Prosodic Structure and Articulatory Posture.

Authors:  Benjamin Parrell; Shrikanth Narayanan
Journal:  Phonetica       Date:  2018-02-08       Impact factor: 1.759

2.  Native Listeners' Use of Information in Parsing Ambiguous Casual Speech.

Authors:  Natasha Warner; Dan Brenner; Benjamin V Tucker; Mirjam Ernestus
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2022-07-15

3.  Do listeners recover "deleted" final /t/ in German?

Authors:  Frank Zimmerer; Henning Reetz
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-07-17
  3 in total

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